3 Ways to Create Highly Valuable Blog Content
Do you struggle coming up with
content ideas for your blog?
Or maybe you create plenty of
blog posts, but they get few views and even less engagement?
If you find that creating
engaging content is challenging, keep reading.
This article will identify some
of the best tips, tools and tactics for creating blog content that helps grow
your business.
#1: Be the resource your
customers really need
What’s your ideal customer’s
biggest problem? Your blog is not about your business, it’s about your
customers.
If you want to attract and engage
your prospects and lead them down the sales funnel, you need to focus on them
and their problems.
The more you create content that
helps your prospects succeed, the more engaged they’ll become with your blog.
So how do you know what your
audience is struggling with?
Ask.
If you’ve been in business for a
while, chances are you already know a lot of what your customers are struggling
with.
But if you’re starting from
scratch or you want to uncover more opportunities where you can help your
customers, consider creating a survey using a free tool like Survey Monkey or
Google Docs.
Extract the “keywords” that drive
the questions.
Once you have a list of the
problems your customers face, you’ll start to notice some recurring phrases.
Maybe it’s “public speaking,” or
“college admissions” or “dating advice.” (If it’s all three, you may want to
narrow your focus.)
Grab one of those phrases,
brainstorm a few alternatives and head on over to Google’s Adword Keyword Tool.
Plug your phrases into the box,
choose “exact match” and hit “search.”
Google will return your keyword
phrases plus a number of related phrases. It will also show you how many people
have searched for each phrase in the last 30 days, and how competitive those
phrases are (at least in the pay-per-click arena; a good indicator of how
difficult it may be to rank well for these phrases).
The Global and Local Monthly
Searches columns will give you insight into how much interest there is in a
specific keyword. Focus on phrases that have high search volume for your blog
posts.
Once you’ve identified your most
promising keywords, go to Google Insights for Search. While there are some
amazing reports you can generate from Insights, scroll right down to the bottom
and look at Top Searches and Rising Searches.
Top Searches will give you a
sense of what people are searching for now, while Rising Searches will give you
a sense of what the next big search terms will be.
Creating valuable content before
it becomes mainstream can give an incredible boost to your blog traffic. Other
bloggers will tend to cite your work when they post related content (creating
inbound links to your blog), and search engines will often reward your post
because of its longevity.
I’ve seen this on my blog and
website when I’ve written on a topic before it’s really caught on. An article I
wrote back in 2008 entitled how to Use Twitter for Business still attracts over
250 new prospects per month to our site more than four years after I wrote it!
Would your business benefit from
getting in front of 3,000 new prospects a year who had never heard of your
company before?
You should also plug your best
keywords into Google Alerts (that’s the last Google plug, I promise!).
Every day, Google will deliver
news stories, blog posts and even tweets to your inbox about your best
keywords. Those are all the seeds of great content posts your ideal customer is
interested in.
#2: Answer the unanswered
questions
People often come to the web to
seek answers and advice. Your audience is no different.
Answering their questions in your
blog is a great way to attract and engage them.
Email
It’s likely that you get emails
from your current customer base looking for advice.
Stop answering them!
OK, that’s not exactly what I
mean. But don’t answer them right away.
Instead, when someone asks you a
question that you feel others are likely struggling with, that’s a perfect
opportunity to create a “Dear Abby”–style post.
Whether it’s “Why can’t I post to
my Face book page as myself?” or “How can a B2B company use Interest? “, you
can create content that will help attract your ideal customer.
Think about it: If one person is
asking you that question, how many other hundreds or thousands who don’t have a
resource to turn to are using Google or Bing? And Google (usually) won’t answer
the question; they’ll just refer the searcher to an authoritative source… like
your blog.
Unless it was a question about
bedwetting and you used their name, chances are they’ll be proud they asked
such an intelligent question. Bonus: you’re (re)introducing them to your blog.
#3: Find the questions your
customers are asking
Next, you need to figure out what
your customers want to know now. Do some research to find the questions they’re
asking?
Quora, Yahoo Answers and LinkedIn
Answers.
These are just a few of the
popular Q&A sites on the web today. People pose questions at these sites in
all types of categories, from parenting to management, home repair to
manufacturing.
But just because a question is
asked (and even answered) doesn’t mean that the topic is closed. Chances are
you have a better, more nuanced or just different answer to the question.
Take the question and make it
your own on your blog.
Keyword Questions
This is one of my favorite tools
for filling a blog with engaging questions, whether you’re a long-time blogger
or just starting out.
Keyword Questions queries Word
Tracker’s search engine partners to find questions that have been posed with
your keywords in them.
I’ve found that using broad terms
for this tool provides the best results. In other words, use “golf” rather than
“golf tips.”
Competitors’ FAQs
You remember FAQs, right? Those
pages on a website that are covered in dust bunnies, having not been updated
since 1997?
Your competition has left some
great questions up on their site with out-of-date answers on them. Your job is
to find those musty old questions, shake them off and breathe new life into
them.
In no way am I suggesting
stealing from your competitors! Frequently asked questions are by definition
frequently asked. Tweak the question and answer it from your own perspective,
based on your experience, in your own voice.
Comment Sections
Comments on a blog post often ask
follow-up questions to the original post. Unfortunately, many of these
questions go unanswered. Even when they do garner a response, that answer is
buried in the comments, difficult to find and share with others.
If someone asks a good follow-up
question in the comment section of your own blog, consider creating a new blog
post as a response and linking to it in your reply.
Also, popular industry blogs will
often generate more comments than the blogger can keep up with. Check out the
comment section on popular blog posts and see if there are some great questions
being asked that you can answer on your own blog.
Whether you’re pulling questions
from emails, Q&A sites, Keyword Questions, competitors’ FAQs or a comments
section, you’re providing a service to your audience as long as you’re creating
a fresh perspective on their challenges.
Plus, your blog posts will make
the answers easier to find, read and share than if they were buried in a
Q&A site or hidden in an email exchange.
Takeaways
If you want to attract and engage
a loyal audience to your blog, you need to be continually creating content that
is of interest to them, not necessarily of interest to you.
By researching your keywords,
digging a little deeper and uncovering the questions your ideal customer is
asking, you can build a blog that builds your business.
You’re Turn
What do you think?
What tips, tactics or techniques
have you used to create content that engages your audience? Let us know in the
comments box below. Who knows? Maybe it will inspire you or another reader to
create even more compelling content for a future blog post!
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